Pairs of Words

Pairs of Words

There are some words in English that often go in pairs. Let us study some of them:

  1. Day and Night
  2. Sun and Moon
  3. Black and White
  4. East and West
  5. North and South
  6. Morning and Evening
  7. Rich and Poor
  8. Up and Down
  9. In and Out
  10. Here and There
  11. Bread and Butter
  12. Door and Window
  13. Needle and Thread
  14. Hammer and Nail
  15. Table and Chair
  16. Bat and Ball
  17. Look and Key
  18. Teacher and Student
  19. King and Queen
  20. Mother and Father
  21. Sister and Brother
  22. Uncle and Aunt
  23. Male and Female
  24. Doctor and Patient
  25. Boy and Girl
  26. Ladies and Gentleman
  27. Buy and Sell
  28. Loss and Gain
  29. Throw and Catch
  30. Cup and Saucer
  31. Wait and See
  32. Short and Sweet

Exercise 1 :- Fill in the blank spaces by choosing the right pair:

  1. A see-saw goes ______ and ______.
  2. I will______ the ball and you ______ it.
  3. Bring your______ and ______ for the game.
  4. Always serve tea in a ______ and ______.
  5. Arrange the ______ and ______ in the classroom.
  6. I have to sew this piece of cloth. Please give the ______ and the ______.
  7. Mr. Brown owns a vegetable shop. He______ and ______ vegetables.
  8. Look at the blackboard. Do not look______ and ______.
  9. A good message is ______ and ______.
  10. The ______ and the ______sat on the throne.

Words

CHOOSE THE RIGHT WORD.

There are some universal saying that are always true look at the following sentences:

  1. The sun shines during the day.
  2. The moon shines at night.
  3. The stars twinkle at night.
  4. The sun rises in the east.
  5. The sun sets in the west.
  6. Fish live in water.
  7. Birds fly in the sky.
  8. Cows give us milk.
  9. Cows eat grass.
  10. The whale is the largest water animal.
  11. Peacocks dance in the rainy season.
  12. The sunflower always faces the sun.
  13. A crow is black.
  14. The sky is blue.
  15. A week has seven days.
  16. There are twelve months in the year.
  17. The earth is round.
  18. The earth revolves round the sun.
  19. The moon revolves round the earth.
  20. Two and two make four.
  21. There are but two sides of a coin.
  22. There are millions of stars in the sky.
  23. Plants gives us fresh air.
  24. Plants help to bring rain.
  25. We cannot live without air.

There are numerous such saying which are true. We cannot quote them all here. Here are some exercises where you have to choose/ pick the right word .

Exarcise 1 :- Choose the right words from the brackets and fill in the blank spaces . The first one has been done for you;-

  1. Fish line in water. (in water/on land)
  2. Birds ______ in the sky.(swim/ fly)
  3. We see with our ______ . (eyes/ears)
  4. We smell with our ______ . (ears/nose)
  5. We hear with our ______ . (ears/eyes)
  6. We taste with our ______ . (tongue/lips)
  7. We need ______ and _____ to line. (air and water/milk and bread)
  8. _______ are good for our health. (fruits/chocolates)
  9. Sugar is ______ . (sweet/sour)
  10. Butter and cheese are made of _______ . (milk/water)
  11. Bread is made of _______ . (floor/flour)
  12. Apples are _______ . (red/blue)
  13. A dog is a faithful ______ . (animal/bird)
  14. Lion is a ________ animal. (domestic/wild)
  15. Ships sail on _____ . (water/land)
  16. A rainbow has ________ colours. (seven/ten)
  17. We must eat _______ food. (fresh/stale)
  18. We should not play with _______ . (fire/toys)

Exarcise 2 :- Here are some sentences with almost similar sounding words. Fill in the blanks with the right word .

  1. Jack and Jill went up the hill to fetch a _____ of water. (pale/pail)
  2. Baa, Baa Black _______ . (ship/sheep) Have you any ______ . (wool/cool)
  3. My grandmother told me a _______ . (tail/tale)
  4. The monkey has a long ______. (tail/tale)
  5. The hen lays _______. (eggs/legs)
  6. Birds lay eggs in ______. (nests/vests)
  7. Ship _____ in water. (sail/rail)
  8. A lion lines in a _____. (den/pen)
  9. Goat’s baby is called a ______ . (kid/lid)
  10. _______ gives us wool. (Ship/Sheep)
  11. Mother cooks foods in a _______. (pen/pan)
  12. Birds have ______ (rings/wings)
  13. He plays in a _______ . (band/hand)
  14. We ______with our hands. (clap/tap)
  15. We ______ with our feet. (clap/tap)

English Alphabetical Order

Alphabetical Order

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z are the 26 letter of the English alphabet. We use these letter to form words. The A B C D order is also called the alphabetical order of English. In a dictionary or an encyclopedia words are arranged in this order. It helps to locate the meaning easily. In a telephone directory or an attendence register also names of people are given in this order.

Exercise 1 – Write 5 words each beginning with the alphabets given below:

A B C D E F K L

Exercise 2 – Arrange these names in alphabetical order:

Anita, Rita, Bill, Sam, Mary, Johiv, Kate, Charies, Liz, Harry, Tom.

Exercise 3 – Write the names of these birds in alphabetical order:

Crow Cuckoo Cock Crane

Pengeein Parrot Peacock Pigeon

Exercise 4 – Make any ten words using the letter of the word:

COMPOSITION

Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner

Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner is a disturbing, powerful, intense, gripping and provocative novel. It stirs a number of emotions. Once you start reading it, you cannot put it down. The degeneration of Afghanistan, the displacement and migration of people bring back memories of the partition of India. The pain/the struggle, strike a chord even in people who were not directly affected by the partition. We have all grown up listening to stories of how our grandparents fled, escaped, leaving everything behind, hoping to return to their motherland one day. But that day never came. How people adapt to new places, people, situations, occupations is a remarkable thing about mankind. We know this by example. In Hosseini’s novel too, we find Afghan families adapting to the changed situation, earning bread and butter in anyway possible.

Besides this we get involved with the characters and their destinies. At a very early stage in the novel we realize there is more to Hasan’s and Amir‘s father’s relationship. We are angry at Amir’s cowardice and subsequent ill-treatment of his loyal, childhood mate Hasan. It proves how jealousy corrodes the goodness within. That one mistake changes/affects the lives of so many people. We feel sorry for Hasan who has to live life like a hazara and endure all kinds of unimaginable insults. The story would have been different, had young Amir protested and saved Hasan from abuse. Hosseini’s portrayal of childhood with its vulnerabilities, fears, jealousies, tensions, is terrific.

All this in the backdrop of the turbulent Afghanistan – the end of monarchy, invasion by the Russian forces and the rise of the Taliban regime. But it is the personal story of the two childhood friends – Amir and Hasan that binds the story together. And the message ‘there is a way to be good again’ is something we all need to imbibe.

I push aside unhappy thoughts

I push aside unhappy thoughts

Try to laugh away the blues

Rationalize that I must have committed some sins

And God wants me to repay

Her negativity tries to engulf me

But God helps me find a chink

I escape

I try to be happy

But do not always succeed

Everybody pays

I hope the cycle breaks now

It should not continue

The suffering should come to an end

The future should smile benevolently

Upon my kids

Not even the shadow of this senselessness

Touch them.

I exist

I exist

She tries to trample my happiness

Every time I resist

The struggle has been going on

For ten long years

I don’t know when and how it will end

It is taking its toll on me

I laugh, but

I am also aware of

The hollowness within

I wish to vent my anger

But I resist

It is not going to lead anywhere

It will only unmask the façade

Of normality

That we carry with us

We are not free

Why are we thus burdened?

Forced to carry the weight thus

The present life does not provide answers

Perhaps we carry the burdens of our past

Oh God, Let this be the last life of

Her misery and ours.

12/08/09

Chetan Bhagat’s the 3 mistakes of my life

Chetan Bhagat’s the 3 mistakes of my life

Like his other novels, Bhagat’s 3 Mistakes is also based on real events. Bhagat caters to the Indian taste by packing in a lot of masala – cricket, business, politics, religion, love and calamities like the earthquake and the Godhara riots. But as in his other novels, intensity is missing in this one too. After reading the novel we keep it back on the shelf – the characters or situations do not stay with us for long.

The novel is about three young friends in Ahmedabad (Gujarat), Govind, Ish and Omi. Govind is the entrepreneur in the group and motivates the others to set up a cricket shop. The shop gradually gains popularity and Govind dreams of expanding business. He wants to move to a new city location. They save, borrow and invest money in a new shopping mall under construction. But their dreams come crashing down with the earthquake. They are shaken up especially Govind but somehow carry on with their lives. Govind teaches maths to Ish’s sister Vidya, Ish finds solace in coaching a muslim boy, Ali, who has exceptional abilities in batting and Omi dabbles with religion and politics in the shadow of his maternal uncle Bittoo mama. Life goes on till Gujarat is hit by the Godhara riots. Omi dies while trying to save Ali, the trust between Ish and Govind is broken when Ish finds about Govind’s affair with his sister Vidya.

From here on life becomes a burden for Govind. And when he is no longer able to bear his friend’s silence and rejection, he pops sleeping pills. It is here that Chetan Bhagat , the writer appears on the scene to set things right. Read the novel to find more.

Chetan Bhagat’s One Night @ the Call Center

Chetan Bhagat’s – One Night @ the Call Center

Bhagat’s One Night…is interesting, contemporary, easy to understand and extremely racy.  It does not tax your brains with heavy stuff. The story is both real and far-fetched. The call center part appears real but God’s intervention………… Well! I think we all need that to ‘right size’ our chaotic, messed up lives. God, are you listening?

The story is about six people working for a call center ‘Connexions’ in Gurgaon, near Delhi.Shyam, Varun, Priyanka, Radhika and Esha are all young and confused. Only the Military Uncle is fifty plus. They cater to foolish/childish queries of their American customers, most of them unwillingly, as it gives them bread and butter, cokes, pizzas and discos etc. The America bashing dialogues bring in the humour though.

The story revolves around the sufferings, family problems, ambitions, hopes and love life of the six characters. But after God’s call, they listen to their ‘inner call’ and act accordingly and fast. (The sudden personality changes look unreal). But perhaps that’s how God works.

So if you want a look into the lives of the current generation of young people, their work, aspirations, attitudes, needs and values – read the novel.

Article on Swayam Prakash

Voicing the Silence: Swayam Prakash’s women centered stories

A reading of Swayam Prakash’s women – centered stories show that the writer rises above the division of sexes, liberates himself from the chains of social conventions, overthrows cultural obstacles and writes about women. There is a deliberate and conscious leaning towards women’s issues. Woman is projected with all her fears, anxieties, insecurities, vulnerabilities, limitations, dependence, pains, and powerlessness. And although the focus is on women, Swayam Prakash succeeds in raising a number of disturbing issues.

Written in a deceptively simple manner Swayam Prakash’s ‘Ek Khoobsurat Ghar’ (A Beautiful Home) is a forceful comment on the patriarchal structure of our society. The woman has a secondary status and her life is limited to the four walls of her house and the needs of the people within it. The woman relates to the outside world through her men and is governed by their positions.

In this traditional setup a woman’s life revolves around the husband. He is the centre of her universe. And for him she sacrifices and gradually erases herself. The story is laced with a subtle irony. The house is a prison where the father acts as police, as judge, as watchman, as commander-in-chief.  Everything significant is done by the father and nobody dares to oppose him or go against his likes/dislikes. Even the children are in awe of the father and find security in his being/presence.

On the other hand the woman’s work/role goes unnoticed, is considered insignificant. Swayam Prakash expresses the ironical paradox of a woman’s life – the woman works tirelessly to make a beautiful and comfortable home yet is not credited for anything. Her work and efforts are invisible. They are taken for granted. And this results in immense exhaustion of the heart and mind.

The patriarchal control and the female dependence are so strong that when the husband is delayed one evening, it causes a storm in the woman’s heart. She feels handicapped, helpless, is assailed by innumerable fears, and is not able to imagine her life without his reassuring presence. But when the husband returns, the storm within her breast does not burst out. It is buried within – ‘Mother did not say anything and went into the kitchen’.

The story ‘Manju Faltu’ describes a woman who becomes redundant. She immerses herself in her household duties and looses her contemporariness. The story showcases how it is a woman who has to compulsorily take on the upbringing of children. It is she who is expected to and has to stifle her desires, give up her job and look after the home and kids. Her involvement with these usually makes her a stranger to the outside world. When the children have grown up and do not need her anymore, she finds that the world has changed a lot and she does not fit into it anymore.

She desperately tries to regain her old, confident self, but time has slipped out of her hands. Her efforts to ‘update’ herself make her a butt of ridicule both at home and outside. And when the sense of failure finally drives home, she is on the verge of a mental breakdown. The story reflects the writer’s concern over the rapid progress which is not only making things but also people ‘obsolete’.

The story ‘Teesri Chithi’ (Third Letter) has a related theme. Here, too, the writer shows how the fast changing technology is making a whole generation of people – futile. This has its repercussions on their families and ultimately society. The writer’s criticism of the decline of moral values in the middle class society is apparent in the behavior and vacuous conversation of the four young men. They have a shallow, non-serious, irresponsible attitude towards everything. The story initially resounds with their frivolous laughter. To build up a contrast, the writer gives a poignant account of a desperate woman who is single not by choice but circumstance. She is looking for escape from her hounded situation through marriage or ultimately suicide.

The story ‘Agale Janam’ (Next Birth), presents a detailed and revealing picture of an agonizing woman during childbirth. It shocks because it exposes too much and more because it is written by a man. The story mirrors an ugly reality of the Indian society where only the birth of baby boy calls for celebration and the birth of a baby girl is mourned. The social conditioning is so strong that women more than men crave and feel fulfilled after a son’s birth.

The insensitivity of a woman towards another woman’s pain is seen in the mother-in-law’s reaction after Sumi, her daughter in law gives birth to a girl child. The husband’s response is the height of male chauvinism. He actually doubts the wives loyalty. The idea that only sons are born in their family is so deep rooted that he feels disgraced. Nobody rejoices in the birth of a new-life, not even the mother. The indifference of her family members makes Sumi turn her face away from her new-born baby. This turning away and the curse ‘go die’ is not a rejection of the girl child but of what the future holds for her. Sumi is not prepared for motherhood so soon after her marriage but she soon realizes that she has no say in the matter- it is her duty to bear a child as soon as possible.

The writer is laying bare the very social structure of the society which not only refuses a woman, a right over her own body but also blinds and benumbs itself to the pain and suffering a woman undergoes while delivering a child.

The character of ‘Ladki’ (Girl) in the story ‘Bali’(Sacrifice) initially offeres some hope. The reader is surprised to see a ‘resisting’ female character – a character that can see through the mirage of development, which cherishes her own tribal life, who revels in her freedom, who consciously tries to adapt to the so – called civilized society, to prove that the tribal people are nowhere inferior to them. She does all this because she wants to be treated as a human being and not as an uncivilized, barbarous creature. She is determined to go back to her native place the day her mistress begins to treat her as an equal. She actually feels richer and more fortunate than her employers as they have not experienced the beauty, colour , fragrance, feel of the natural world.

The suicide of such a sensitive and strong woman character at the end of the story jolts the reader. She gives in to the circumstances when she belongs nowhere. All her rebellion and resistance come to an end. We are left with the question: Why this had to happen? Why couldn’t the girl have lived after such a struggle?

But the writer would not have been able to shake the reader out of his complacency. Through the portrayal of the girl who is any woman and everywoman, Swayam Prakash is covering a whole gamut of issues – impact of industrialization/ urbanization/ modernization on tribal social life- uprooting a whole culture- the invasion of the culture of money and materialism- growth of poverty-man’s domination over woman’s body and life- indifference of parents, especially in the lower strata of society. The story ‘Bali’ puts a question mark on the whole idea of development as it is at the cost of one’s roots, culture, traditions, moral and social values, self-sufficiency.

All these stories are multilayered and incorporate a variety of themes and ideas. They reflect the writer’s perception, engagement and protest with a number of social and political issues. He voices the silence of the weak and the downtrodden. He deconstructs the notion that only women can write about women. Swayam Prakash successfully articulates women’s oppression in the patriarchal system, questions the restricted space allowed to her, her exclusion and impoverishment in the social system. The writer presents the reality of female life and evokes a response from the reader.

(Swayam Prakash is an Indian short story writer and novelist. He writes in Hindi)